The Structural Evolution of the Berkine Basin, Algeria
By
Stephen McKenna1, Richard J. Hedley1
(1) Anadarko Algeria Company Limited, Uxbridge, United Kingdom
Anadarko has been successfully exploring the Berkine Basin of Algeria for more than a decade and has access to an extensive seismic and well database. Interpretation of these data suggests the Phanerozoic rocks record a polyphase tectonic evolution.
The Late Palaeozoic to Recent evolution of the Berkine Basin is closely
related to kinematic plate movements along the margins of the African Craton.
The first effects of the collision of Laurasia with
Africa
occurred during the
Late Devonian and result in major changes to the sediment provenance areas in
the Berkine Basin. Within the Berkine Basin the effects of the Hercynian Orogeny
resulted in uplift and tilting of the Palaeozoic intervals followed by erosion.
Major extensional rifting occurred in Late Triassic/Liassic times related to
break-up of Pangea and the opening of the Central Atlantic. During the drift
phase, in Middle Jurassic - Early Cretaceous,
Africa
moved eastwards relative to
the Iberian plate, resulting in sinistral movement along the
Newfoundland-Gibraltar Fracture Zone (NGFZ). The stresses resulted in
transpresssional folds with NW-SE trending axes (Austrian Event). Opening of the
North Atlantic, during Late Cretaceous-Oligocene, changed the relative movement
of Iberia and
Africa
along the NGFZ resulting in dextral wrench tectonics with a
NW-SE compressional component (Pyrenean Event). The Berkine Basin was uplifted,
Palaeogene sediments were eroded and some pre-existing NE-SW oriented fault
zones were structurally inverted. Finally, the effects of Late Tertiary (11-5
ma) Alpine collision of
Africa
into Europe were felt in the Berkine Basin and
resulted in mild regional tilting and gentle inversion.